 | Archive-Name: superpar-faq Last-modified: 12 Dec 2003
28 Dedications 2 Introduction and Table of Contents and justification 4 Comp.parallel news group history 6 parlib 8 comp.parallel group dynamics 10 Related news groups, archives and references 12 14 16 18 Supercomputing and Crayisms 20 IBM and Amdahl 22 Grand challenges and HPCC 24 Suggested (required) readings 26 Dead computer architecture society
Dedications ===========
This FAQ is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Sidney (Sid) Fernbach (CDC/LLL) and to George Michael (LLNL, still alive), perhaps two of the men most responsible for coining the term "supercomputer." Along with Sid Fernbach and Jack Worlton. They were not only responsible for helping promote and fund supercomputing and parallel computing, but they also took much flak. They also believed in interactive computing at a time when the world was batch-oriented.
To Sid: I will always chuckle when reminded that you felt that the Cray Time Sharing System (CTSS, as distinct from the Cambridge Time Sharing System or the Compatible Time Sharing System) would have made a good VAX operating system along with the Trix editor. Sid passed away on the day he was to speak at a local ACM SIGBIG meeting. The VMS people would have had a great fit.
To George with whom I used to occasionally share an office one day a week at Ames: thanks for the stimulating discussion and even bowing to the new generation for computists. Your contribution is undervalued by many. All of your friends remember you.
Additional, special mention: Seymour Cray is unquestionably credited with making "supercomputer" a household word (which was apparently missed by some people in the mid-1980s). To quote Nolan Bushnell, Cray embodies: Remember engineers drive the boat. We are here because of Seymour and others.
And Seymour is here because of Jim Thornton.
To Dave Kuck: Who had to put up with the world waiting so long for it to "catch up."
To Glen Culler: Who started with a couple of obscure languages: MOLSF and COL with very intense keyboards which was incentive to place UCSB on the ARPAnet.
To: Our past moderators: "Steve" Stevenson, CS Dept.,Clemson U. our news group founder and first moderator from comp.hypercube renaming to comp.parallel 1988-1995?. Mike Bigrigg, CMU CS, 1996?-2001. For unsung, thankless work.
Years ago from /usr/games/fortune: Bradley's Bromide: If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee -- that will do them in.
Articles: comp.parallel Administrative: eugene@cse.ucsc.edu.SNIP Archive: http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&group=comp.parallel
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